Lead Opinion
Marc Kutten sued Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, alleging that Sun Life improperly denied him long-term disability benefits under a disability plan governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). Sun Life and Kutten filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court denied Sun Life’s motion for summary judgment and granted Kutten’s motion. We reverse.
I.
Kutten was the president and a co-owner of Property Solutions Group LLC. In 1994, Kutten was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa, a progressive eye disease that can eventually lead to blindness. At his doctor’s direction and under his doctor’s supervision, Kutten took 15,000 units a day of a non-prescribed, over-the-counter vitamin A palmitate supplement. J.A. 431. The National Eye Institute supported Kut-ten’s course of treatment, and, though his vitamin A supplements could not cure his retinitis pigmentosa, they could slow the disease’s rate of progression.
Prior to June 2010, Property Solutions Group offered a group disability benefit plan through Aetna. The Aetna plan offered maximum gross benefits of $1,000 a month. Effective June 1, 2010, Property Solutions Group purchased a new policy with Sun Life. The Sun Life Plan (the Plan) offered maximum gross benefits of $6,000 a month. The Plan also included an exclusion for pre-existing conditions:
No LTD benefit will be payable for any Total or Partial Disability that is due to:
6. a Pre-Existing Condition.
Pre-Existing Condition means during the 3 months prior to the Employee’s Effective Date of Insurance the Employee received medical treatment, care or services, including diagnostic measures, or took prescribed drugs or medicines for the disabling condition.1
J.A. 133. If Sun Life determined that an employee had a pre-existing condition according to the Pre-Existing Condition clause, then the employee was not entitled to the benefits under the Plan. The employee was still entitled, however, to the same level of benefits available to the employee under the Aetna plan. J.A. 134.
On September 21, 2010, Kutten’s eye condition forced him to stop working. He applied for long-term disability benefits under the Plan on October 6, 2010. After initially denying Kutten’s claim, Sun Life
Kutten filed suit in February 2012. Kutten and Sun Life filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court granted Kutten’s motion for summary judgment, finding that Sun Life abused its discretion in construing the Pre-Existing Condition clause to apply to Kutten’s taking of supplements. According to the court, Sun Life’s broad interpretation of the phrase “medical treatment” was contrary to the Plan’s plain language and rendered portions of the clause meaningless and internally inconsistent. Sun Life appealed.
II.
The parties agree that the Plan grants Sun Life discretionary authority to construe its terms. We therefore review Sun Life’s decision for abuse of discretion. See King v. Hartford Life & Acc. Ins. Co.,
This case turns on a narrow question. Was it reasonable for Sun Life to conclude that Kutten’s vitamin A supplements constituted a “medical treatment”? The parties focus their attention on Finley factors two and five: whether the administrator’s interpretation renders language meaningless or internally inconsistent and whether the interpretation is contrary to clear language of the policy. .Because these inquiries are closely related in this case, we will analyze them together.
Kutten urges us to adopt the district court’s rationale, that because the PreExisting Condition clause separates “medical treatment” from “prescribed drugs or medicines” with the conjunction “or,” Sun Life intended to exclude all “drugs or medicines” from the phrase “medical treatment.” Kutten argues if “prescribed drugs or medicines” are excluded from the phrase “medical treatment,” then vitamin A supplements must be excluded from the phrase as well because vitamin supplements require even less medical interven
We decline to adopt Kutteris rigid construction of the Pre-Existing Condition clause. In Smith v. United Television, Inc. Special Severance Plan,
Our search is not for the “best or preferable interpretation” of the Pre-Existing Condition clause’s terms. Hutchins v. Champion Int’l Corp.,
Kutten attempts to portray Sun Life’s interpretation of the Pre-Existing Condition clause as absurd by analogizing his vitamin regimen to other common, self-administered and seemingly mild forms of personal healthcare such as applying suntan lotion or eating a high-fiber diet. These analogies, however, are flawed. The controversy’s context and the clause’s purpose enlighten our assessment of Sun Life’s interpretation. See Hutchins,
With the benefit of hindsight, Sun Life could have drafted the Pre-Existing Condition clause to more clearly cover Kut-ten’s supplement regimen. We return, however, to the “dispositive principle” governing our abuse-of-discretion review: “ ‘[W]here plan fiduciaries have offered a ‘reasonable interpretation’ of disputed provisions, courts may not replace [it] with an interpretation of their own.’ ” See King,
III.
For the reasons stated, we reverse the district court’s entry of summary judgment and remand for the district court to enter summary judgment in favor of Sun Life.
Notes
. A similar clause excluded coverage for any "increases in amounts of insurance.” J.A. 133.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I believe the district court properly concluded Sun Life abused its discretion in denying Kutten long-term disability benefits. It was unreasonable for Sun Life to conclude the use of a vitamin supplement constituted medical treatment. I therefore respectfully dissent from the decision reversing the district court.
In my view, this is a simple ease of an insurer issuing a poorly-drafted policy and then going to significant lengths to evade its terms. My major concern is with the expansive definition of the term “medical treatment” which the majority permits. To me, the use of a vitamin supplement does not constitute medical treatment. While the use of prescribed drugs and medicines generally require that a person have interacted with a medical professional, the use of vitamin supplements requires no such medical intervention as they are
The majority acknowledges “Sun Life could have drafted [its policy] to more clearly cover Kutten’s supplement regimen,” and the policy’s “literal language may not neatly fit Kutten’s course of treatment.” It is for precisely these reasons the district court properly concluded Sun Life abused its discretion in denying Kut-ten’s claim. The Pre-Existing Condition clause’s language simply does not cover the use of a vitamin supplement. Of course, in hindsight, Sun Life may wish it had drafted the Pre-Existing Condition clause in a different manner so it would apply to conditions such as Kutten’s retinitis pigmentosa, but the clause’s language cannot be construed to apply here.
The flaw in the majority’s reasoning as contained is its decision is to essentially ignore the policy language and, instead, apply its own definition of what should be included within the Pre-Existing Condition clause. Intuitively, it may seem Kut-ten’s retinitis pigmentosa should fall within the ordinary definition of a pre-existing condition. Indeed, I agree Kutten had a “pre-existing condition” in the ordinary definition of that term. Nonetheless, Kut-ten did not have a “Pre-Existing Condition” as defined by Sun Life’s policy, and such is the critical distinction Sun Life and the majority have failed to make. We are not free to use the ordinary definition. Instead, we must apply the specific language of Sun Life’s policy. For future policies, Sun Life is free to revise its policy language to more clearly exclude conditions such as retinitis pigmentosa, but in this case it should be bound by the bargain it entered into with Kutten.
The majority notes, “[w]ith the benefit of hindsight, Sun Life could have drafted the Pre-Existing Condition clause to more clearly cover Kutten’s supplement regimen.” Yet, hindsight is unnecessary when Sun Life can simply rely on a federal court to retroactively fix its poorly-drafted policies. It is not this Court’s prerogative to assist a plan administrator in evading its own poorly-chosen policy language. Instead, our responsibility is to confirm that the plan administrator interprets its policies in a reasonable manner. Because I view Sun Life’s expansive interpretation of medical treatment as unreasonable, I respectfully dissent.
